The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 1974, Image 5

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    ive in the Office of Sy*
ie of 1 p. m. of the day pn«J
UNIVERSITY
I HE DEAN OF
AND RECORDS
e the Texas A4tM i
bomber paroled
by federal authorities
Football tickets
THE BATTALION Page 5
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1974
SG discusses ticket system
I WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.
Parole Board Monday paroled
;nneth Ray McMaster, who was
nvicted for bombing 33 school
ises in Longview, Tex. in the
idst oi a 1970 school integration
ispute.
McMaster, who has served 35
I second terms). The km
grade report period on %
I in satisfying this ninety ia
s qualifying under this rip
nes with the ringdeHs.nm lonths in prison, will be paroled on
ug. This should bedonepr»
till records to be checWt
. Students already ha^
lours on record may ordtri
its are eligible to orderftii
itttes will be taken by the ^
I, 1974, and will eontiw
All rings must In* paidfwi
d. Students will savetimtl!
s along when ready toordti
icir names in advancewill 1»!
low times for records tok
r to arrive at the Registmi!
All rings ordered, reganUts!
1974 or Decembers, ISfit
e. llte ring clerk is on dui)
p. m. to 5 p. m. of each wed,
owever. in order for recori
t Ik* placed prior to 4 pa
I. We hope this informitin
our congratulations.
•an
is
Pec. 19.
McMaster was sentenced in May,
972 to eight years in prison after
HC CllglUIC UlUCf *13 , • . 1 r • •
tiled for grudusta OiBeingconvicted ol conspiring to vio-
ite civil rights laws.
McMaster and Fred L. Hayes,
oth of Longview, were indicted by
■federal grand jury for conspiring to
[iolate the rights of black pupils of
e Longview Independent School
istrict.
The grand jury charged that the
two conspired to enter the Long
view Independent School District
bus parking lot and set explosive
charges designed to damage the
buses and thereby prevent trans
portation of black pupils to school.
About 33 buses suffered varying de
grees of damage.
The two were also charged with
obstructing a federal court order
approving an amended school de
segregation plan by the Longview
Independent School District.
Hayes was sentenced to 10 years
in a federal penitentiary. Hayes op
erated a catering sendee in Long
view at which McMaster was emp
loyed.
tad Battalion Classifieds
ANDRE’S
JLlu
t
S WANTED
nt. $50 per month plu$
16 mornings. 20tl
WANTED
accurate reasonaUi
410tfi
ill 823-7723.
Can do theses and It
-4483. 291*
accurate. All lundi
2334
ST
tchhand. Between Rtiddtf
3. 19D
UK'S
iERVICE INC.
and Services
ental
IVAN 822-2133
BASKETBALL
COURT
VOLLEYBALL
COURT
INDIVIDUAL
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CONDITIONING
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ALL UTILITIES
PAID
COVERED
PARKING
ALLELECTRIC
APPLIANCES
BIKE SHOP
COLLEGE STATION
305 University Drive
846 0951
By JUDY BAGGETT
Staff Writer
Random distribution of football
tickets coupled with the senority
system was discussed by the SG ex
ecutive committee Sunday.
Random distribution could
eliminate lines forming for ticket
days in advance. The senority sys
tem would still be enforced. Tickets
could be sold in lots of one, two, four
or six, said the committee.
Random distribution means the
person’s place in line has no effect
on the seats he gets. Seats will be
distributed at random.
The possibility of students eating
where they wish, instead of having
assigned dining halls was discussed.
Some members said there might be
problems of overcrowding at the
Krueger-Dunn Commons. The $2
million renovation on Sbisa will
modernize the Cafeteria. Sbisa will
have a shuttle system as does the
Commons.
The shuttle system consists of
having several shorter lines with
one person serving all the main
foods instead of having one long
line.
The National Student Lobby
Title IX Resolution will be heard on
an emergency reading at the Wed
nesday Student Senate meeting. It
is a series of amendments on the
education program concerning sex
discrimination.
The resolution would guarantee
that no discrimination would occur
due to marital status in employment
benefits and job opportunities. It
would also allow opportunities for
athletic competition for women
with equal status to men’s competi
tion.
Pending proposals are an election
resolution and enforcements of reg
ulations.
The election resolution would
allow freshmen to run for office
without waiting for mid-term
grades. They can not be on scholas
tic probation and must have a 2.25
grade point ratio at the end of the
semester.
To enforce regulations it has been
proposed to give the chairman of the
Judge refuses to
prohibit haircuts
LOOKING AHEAD?
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caused by a cracked or
chipped windshield!
Let us contact your insurance company &
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116 Walton (Eastgate) College Station
846-1796
HOUSTON (AP) — District
Court Judge William Hatten re
fused Monday to prohibit haircuts
for David Owen Brooks, 19, one of
two defendants in the mass murders
Musick also claimed haircuts deny
his client to appear in court with a
“I’m not going to tell the sheriff
how to run his jail, ” said Hatten in
rejecting a motion filed by Ted
Musick, lawyer for Brooks.
The motion alleged jail inmates
and jailers physically abused Brooks
when they cut his hair Sept. 25.
Musick also claimed hairucts deny
his client to appear in court with a
hair style of his own choice. Brooks
and shoulder length hair at the time
of his arrest last year.
Sheriff s Lt. Robert Hamilton tes
tified Monday two inmates and a
jailer forced Brooks to have a haircut
but did not abuse him. Hamilton
quoted Brooks as saying he would
“fight the whole damn jail” rather
than get a haircut.
Brooks, with his hair cut above
his ears and collar, did not testify. A
sanity hearing before Hatten is
scheduled Nov. 4.
Meanwhile, it was revealed the
second defendant in the sex-
torture-murder case, Elmer Wayne'
Henley, has been assigned by the
Texas Department of Corrections to
the maximum security Ramsey No.
2 unit in Brazoria County south of
Houston.
Henley, after a change of venue
trial in San Antonio, was found
guilty on six murder counts in Au
gust and was sentenced to six
99-year prison terms to run con
secutively for a total of 594 years.
Brooks has been named in four
murder charges, two of them on
joint indictments that also named
Henley.
The San Antonio guilty verdicts
and sentences are under appeal.
Ed Pegelow, one of Henley’s
lawyers, said Monday Henley now
is confined to a Rams dormitory unit
with about 60 other prisoners.
With good behavior credit, Hen
ley would be eligible for parole after
serving 12 to 20 years but eligibility
is no guarantee a parole would be
granted.
Hatten also revealed Monday he
has appointed a second lawyer,
Elaine Hocker, to represent
Brooks.
Panel will hear complaints
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) A panel to
answer customer complaints about
franchised new car dealers has been
organized by the Texas Automobile
Dealers Association.
Jasper Jones, association presi
dent, said Monday the seven-
member panel does not have the
authority to force a dealer to comply,
with the panel’s recommendations,
but “it can levy fines up to $1,000
and cause the offending dealer to be
expelled from TADA. ”
Jones said the panel will consider
only written complaints involving
franchised new car and truck deal
ers. TADA has approximately 1,500
franchised dealer members in
Texas, he said.
The Automotive Consumer Ac
tion Panel, Auto CAP, includes
John Cleveland, owner of Cleve
land Motors in San Angelo; Rodger
Meier, owner of Rodger Meier
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Aggieland Pictures
FRESHMEN:
MAKEUPS Oct. 7—Oct. 11
SENIORS & GRADUATES
Oct 14 - Oct 18 A-F
Oct 21 - Oct 25 G-K
Oct 28 - Nov 1 L-0
Nov 4 - Nov 8 P-S
Nov 11 - Nov 15 T-Z
Freshmen who have paid to have their pictures placed in the 1975
Aggieland should have their photograph taken according to schedule at—
UNIVERSITY STUDIO
115 North Main
846-8019
College Station
Judicial Board injunction power.
This would allow the chairman to
stop campaigners in possible viola
tion of election rules. The judicial
board would have to meet within 24
hours of the injunction.
Voter registration was labeled
successful by student government.
Over 1,000 students registered.
Vending machines will be put in
on a trial basis in the corps dorms.
The machines were taken out in the
spring because the dorms are not
occupied during the summer. Offi
cials claimed that the machines
were abused to the extent they were
losing money and were reluctant to
put the machines back in.
Student Senate will meet Wed
nesday at 7:30 p.m. in 204 Harring
ton Center. By-law 18 resolution,
ticket resolution and the parking re
solution will be included in the dis
cussion.
By-law 18 is a resolution propos
ing no limit to the number of times a
person with speaking privileges can
address the floor.
The parking resolution calls for
reducing the fine for the first offense
from $5 to $2.
Access to
government
bill passed
WASHINGTON (AP)—Con
gress, climaxing three years of
work, finished action Monday night
on a compromise bill designed to
improve the antisecrecy punch of
the nation’s basic “right to know”
law and sent it to President Ford.
The House took the final congres
sional step as it voted 349 to 2 in
favor of the compromise legislation
which had cleared the Senate by
voice vote last Tuesday. Reps.
Omar Burleson, D-Tex., and Earl
F. Landgrebe, R-Ind., cast the dis
senting votes.
Rep. Frank Horton, R-N.Y.,
senior GOP member of the House
Government Operations Commit
tee which produced the legislation,
said he believes Ford will sign it.
Senate-House conferees drafted the
compromise in hopes it would over
come Ford’s objections to earlier
versions of the measure.
The bill, providing the first
changes in the Freedom of Informa
tion Act since this law became effec
tive on July 4, 1967, is intended to
strengthen the public’s access to
government documents by gener
ally making it easier and quicker to
do so.
HOUSE OF TIRES
COULTER AT TEX. AVE. 822-7139
BRYAN — HOUSTON — CONROE
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DEALERS WELCOME
EASY CREDIT
Cadillac in Dallas; Sallie Lamers,
president and general manager of
World Wide Cars in Fort Worth;
Howard Jacobe, owner of Jacobe
Lincoln-Mercury in Houston; Al
Komray, owner of American Motors
Center in San Antonio; Austin
lawyer Jo Anne Christian; and
Robert Patterson of the Texas Edu
cation Agency.
A state agency, the Texas Motor
Vehicle Commission, was created in
1971 to respond to consumer com
plaints about new cars and trucks.
Save money and
enjoy Kentucky Fried
Chicken every
FAMILY TUESDAY
THE DINNER BOX $1.29
The dinner box
includes three pieces
of the Colonel's
finger lickin' good
chicken, potatoes 'n'
gravy, cole slaw, and
two rolls.
THE SNACK BOX 99c
The snack
box is just
right for
small appetites.
It has two big
pieces of chicken,
potatoes, gravy,
and a roll.
No substitutions please.
fcntiifky Tried UkickeH
110 Dominik Drive, College Station
3320 Texas Avenue, Bryan
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